Owen v. Stoner

114 So. 613, 148 Miss. 397, 1927 Miss. LEXIS 59
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 21, 1927
DocketNo. 26671.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 114 So. 613 (Owen v. Stoner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Owen v. Stoner, 114 So. 613, 148 Miss. 397, 1927 Miss. LEXIS 59 (Mich. 1927).

Opinion

McGowen, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

A. M. and Kate M. Owen, appellants here, on the final decree of the chancery court of Leflore' county, approving. the final account of Alfred Stoner, executor, and ap-pellee here, closing the administration of said estate and allowing said Alfred Stoner, executor, a credit for attorney’s fees of two thousand dollars prosecute this appeal. By the will of D. M. M'cG-ehee, decedent, Alfred Stoner was named as executor, and there was one specific legacy, a life insurance .policy for three thousand dollars bequeathed to Miss Maggie Swann. The residue of the estate was bequeathed to the appellants A. M. and Kate. M. Owen., The entire record shows that each petition filed in the chancery court in the course of this administration, beginning with the petition for probate of the will and ending with the petition for approval of final account and allowance of attorney’s fees, was by Alfred Stoner, executor, pro se. The record does not disclose that any solicitor appeared for said executor in any matter connected with the administration of this estate. The petition for approval of final account and allowance of attorney’s fees shows that the total value of the estate is twenty-two thousand one hundred ninety .dollars and eighteen cents, inclusive of the uncollected not due notes and other personalty, and the account shows that said executor has collected seven thousand three hundred seventy-five dollars and eighteen cents, and disbursed, as per vouchers one to eight, inclusive, six hundred seven dollars and twenty-one cents, leaving a balance of cash *405 on hand of five thousand seven hundred sixty-seven dollars and' eighty-seven cents.

The petition and final account both showed that notes in his hands of certain individuals would not all become due until January 1,1935, and prayed for approval of said account, and that he be permitted to turn over to the devi-sees and legatees the balance of the assets in his hands.

The petition further showed that the deceased died seized and possessed of “real estate in the city of Jackson, Hinds county, Mississippi, and also real estate in Willacy county, Texas, but the will executed by said testator did not direct that petitioner make any disposition of it.”

With no voucher attached to the account therefor, and without any allógation in the petition that any solicitor had been employed or contracted with, he prayed “that petitioner be allowed a reasonable attorney’s fee in this behalf.”

The court below approved the account as being correct and complete in every respect, the decree directed that the three thousand dollar life insurance policy be paid to Miss Maggie Swann and directed that the residue of the estate shown in the account be turned over to the legatees, A. M. and Kate M. Owen, appellants here, and the court further found that:

The ‘ ‘ sum of two thousand dollars is a reasonable allowance to the said executor' for attorney’s fees in this behalf, (and) it is ordered, adjudged, and decree that the said executor, Alfred Stoner, be and he is hereby allowed the sum of two thousand dollars as attorney’s fees, no part of which shall be deducted from the three thousand dollars mentioned herein as being the property of Miss Maggie Swann. ’ ’

The decree further recites that there is no further need of an executor, and that the estate has been fully administered.

*406 The mil was probated and the executor appointed on June 6, 1926', and the final account approved and allowed on the 28th day of March, 1927.

The appellants assign as error the allowance of two thousand dollars to be paid as attorney’s fees by the executor, Alfred Stoner, to himself.

Counsel for appellee, the executor, stresses the fact that, although process was ¡duly issued and served, it does not appear that the appellants were personally in court, or took any exception to the action of the court in this, or any other behalf, saying’ that in the absence of objection or exception to the final decree this matter cannot now be reviewed by this court; that the decree became final in the lower court without objection being’ formally entered by the appellants. .

It will be observed that by this decree, these appellants. A. M. and Kate M. Owen were the parties required by decree of the court to pay these attorney’s fees if allowed to the executor. ■

Under the common law, the position of an executor was an honorary one of trust and confidence reposed in the party named by the testator as such, and was not entitled to compensation for his services as such executor, but, by statute, early in the history of this state, an executor was allowed compensation within reasonable limits and the allowance of' commissions within these limits was within the sound discretion of the chancery court, and the finding of such court will not be disturbed, unless shown to have been a manifest abuse of discretion. Spratt v. Baldwin, 33 Miss. 581; Powell v. Burrus, 35 Miss. 605.

But the question of commissions to the executor is not under review for the reason that the executor neither asks for nor was allowed commissions in the court below.

Prior to the passag’e of the act which is now section 1875', Hemingway’s Code 1927 (section 2131, Code of 1906), an executor who found it necessary to employ an *407 attorney in the course of the administration of an estate became personally liable for attorney’s fees thus incurred, and was not permitted to charge same against the estate. This statute is as follows:

“In annual and final settlements, the executor or administrator shall be entitled to credit for such reasonable sums as he may have paid for the services of an attorney in the management or in behalf of the estate if the court be of opinion that the services were proper and rendered in good faith.”

It is too patent for argument that the court below allowed an attorney’s fee to the executor for himself, and not as compensation to some other attorney, employed in good faith, to represent the executor in the course of his administration. The compensation of an attorney and the right of the executor to employ one at the expense of the estate are strictly statutory, and in this case it does not appear from the petition and- decree that an attorney was employed or contracted with by the executor. So, there can be no doubt that this allowance was to Alfred Stoner, executor, and it is not alleged in the petition, nor shown in the account, that any attorney’s fees had been paid by the executor for such services. It appears to us that the effort was to allow attorney’s fees in lieu of commissions.

An executor may not be allowed attorney’s fees, unless he shows the payment of such fees or liability incurred therefor, for which the court, finding same to be for services rendered which were proper and in good faith, may allow a reasonable sum to be credited to the executor.

There was no effort here to pursue the statutory method.

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Bluebook (online)
114 So. 613, 148 Miss. 397, 1927 Miss. LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/owen-v-stoner-miss-1927.